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City Hall of Vézelise en Meurthe-et-Moselle

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Hôtel de ville
Meurthe-et-Moselle

City Hall of Vézelise

    Place de l'Hôtel de Ville
    54330 Vézelise
Hôtel de ville de Vézelise
Hôtel de ville de Vézelise
Hôtel de ville de Vézelise
Hôtel de ville de Vézelise
Hôtel de ville de Vézelise
Hôtel de ville de Vézelise
Hôtel de ville de Vézelise
Hôtel de ville de Vézelise
Hôtel de ville de Vézelise
Hôtel de ville de Vézelise
Hôtel de ville de Vézelise

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1272
First mention of the halls
1599-1601
Reconstruction by Nicolas la Hiere
1735
Adding the East Flag
1764
Audience reconstruction
15 juin 1940
Bombing and damage
30 novembre 1942
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Charles III de Lorraine - Duke of Lorraine Sponsor of reconstruction in 1599.
Nicolas la Hiere - Architect Directs the reconstruction of the halls (1599-1601).
Claude Thomas Gentillâtre - Architect Add the pavilion is in 1735.
Deklier-Delille - Bridge and road engineer Reconstructed the audience in 1764.

Origin and history

The town hall of Vézelise was built in the 13th century, with halls attested by 1272, enlarged in the 15th century. These wooden structures, which had become obsolete, were entirely rebuilt from 1599 onwards under the impulse of Duke Charles III of Lorraine. The architect Nicolas la Hiere directs the works, using oaks from the forests of Vaudémont and stones from Houdreville. The hall, on two levels, houses shops, audience and attic, while five houses are expropriated to expand the central location. The work was completed around 1601, with joint funding from the local community and the Duke.

In 1735, the architect Claude Thomas Gentillâtre added an east pavilion for the town hall, balancing the composition with the existing audience. In 1764, the engineer Deklier-Delille rebuilt the latter without changing its judicial function, active until the abolition of the justices of peace. The clock comes from the Capuchin convent. Damaged by a bombardment in 1940, the whole was restored to its original state. The materials — oak, flat stone, state-of-the-art tiles — bear witness to local resources (forests, quarries in Houdreville, tilery in Goviller).

Ranked a Historic Monument in 1942, the building retains its medieval structure despite the additions of the 18th century. The hall, almost intact, illustrates the civil architecture of Lorrain, mixing market functions (shops, public weight), judicial (audience) and symbolic (community house). Its central location, inherited from the medieval halls, reflects the pivotal role of Vézelise as a place of trade and ducal power in Lorraine.

External links